London, July 2, 2026, 13:04 BST
- Barratt Redrow (LON:BTRW) fell 1.68% to 275.00p/275.20p. The FTSE 100 added roughly 0.4%.
- A group action targeting big UK housebuilders is seeking damages of £2.2 billion to £4.5 billion, but the case still needs a green light from the Competition Appeal Tribunal.
- The claim’s upper end is 117% of Barratt Redrow’s current market cap, though Barratt hasn’t put out a breakdown for Barratt-only damages.
- Barratt Redrow is set to give its FY26 trading update on July 15.
Barratt Redrow plc (LON:BTRW) dropped more than the overall London market Thursday. AJ Bell’s delayed prices quoted BTRW at 275.00p/275.20p, off 4.70p, or 1.68%. Recent trades went through near 275.3p as of 12:46 BST. At the same time, the FTSE 100 rose 0.43% to 10,523.66, according to Hargreaves Lansdown’s delayed feed.
The focus for Barratt isn’t just about mortgage rates or completions now. Investors have to consider the proposed class action filed this week against major UK housebuilders for alleged anti-competitive behavior. Reuters said the claim targets more than 700,000 buyers of new-build homes in Britain from October 2015 through June 24, 2026.
Hausfeld, which represents proposed class lead Mark McLaren, said the lawsuit is targeting £2.2 billion to £4.5 billion in damages. That would mean between £3,100 and £6,200 for each homeowner affected. The claim names Barratt Redrow, Bellway, Redrow, Berkeley, Bloor Homes, Persimmon, Taylor Wimpey, Vistry and Countryside Partnerships. It still needs the green light from the Competition Appeal Tribunal.
McLaren said homeowners “may well have been left out of pocket” if housebuilders swapped sensitive pricing and sales info instead of competing. Scott Campbell at Hausfeld said most homeowners can’t bring individual claims because it’s too expensive and complex. Hausfeld
The claim figure isn’t limited to Barratt alone. That’s the main point. With Barratt Redrow’s market cap at £3.86 billion, the full industry claim range comes out to about 57% to 117% of its equity value. This is just a way to gauge the scale against Barratt, not a split of damages.
Data from AJ Bell and Hargreaves Lansdown showed the stock trading near its 52-week low.
| Barratt Redrow gauge | Latest reading | Market read-through |
|---|---|---|
| Bid-offer | 275.00p / 275.20p | Shares dropped 1.68% today |
| Market value | £3.86 billion | Legal risk big enough to bite even if the company splits |
| 52-week range | 235.40p to 456.70p | Bid is up 16.8% from the year’s low, off 39.8% from the top |
| Volume | 9.89 million shares | Turnover high, selloff stands out |
| FTSE 100 | 10,523.66, up 0.43% | Barratt trailed the index |
The balance-sheet check matters more now as Barratt started talking up cash again. In April, the group lifted its FY26 year-end net cash target to £550 million-£650 million, from £400 million-£500 million before. That was driven by lower spend on land and the timing of old remediations.
| Measure | Figure | Scale beside Barratt Redrow market value |
|---|---|---|
| Industry figure proposed | £2.2 billion-£4.5 billion | 57%-117% |
| Net cash target for FY26 | £550 million-£650 million | 14%-17% |
| Forward sales as of March 29 | £3.54 billion | 92% |
| Company-cited consensus for FY26 adj. PBT | £568 million | 15% |
Barratt’s own update helped the shares earlier, before the legal news hit. In April the company reported total forward sales, including joint ventures, had climbed to 11,395 homes from 10,245 a year ago, with the value of those forward sales at £3.54 billion, up from £3.14 billion. Barratt said it was 94% forward sold for FY26, and kept its outlook for total home completions at 17,200 to 17,800.
Barratt CEO David Thomas described Q3 as “solid” and said the firm is still set to meet both completions and adjusted pretax profit forecasts. The company put consensus adjusted pretax profit for FY26 at £568 million as of April 14. Barratt Developments
Land approvals were the soft spot in the update. Barratt signed off on 4,010 plots so far this financial year, well below the 15,301 it approved last year. The company also trimmed its FY26 land approval goal to 7,000-9,000 plots, down from its previous 10,000-12,000. That keeps more cash, but adds pressure to get the most from its current land bank and to speed up integrating Redrow.
Housing data offered no real surprise. Nationwide said on Friday that UK house prices stayed mostly flat in June, after dropping 0.6% in May. Annual growth is running at 2.2%, with the average property priced at £277,484. Regionally, Northern Ireland led with an 8.6% gain year on year in Q2. In the Outer South East, prices inched up just 0.1%.
Nationwide’s chief economist Robert Gardner said the market has “softened a little” since Middle East tensions pushed up energy prices and market rates. He also said if the recent drop in market rates that drive fixed mortgage pricing sticks, it might boost confidence.
Barratt has set July 15 for its FY26 trading update, with full-year results on Sept. 16. The July numbers will stand out as the first planned checkpoint since the class action went in, and will show if cash conversion, land discipline, and forward sales remain key for the stock.